SDMar 31, 2023Code
Unsupervised Anomaly Detection and Localization of Machine Audio: A GAN-based ApproachAnbai Jiang, Wei-Qiang Zhang, Yufeng Deng et al.
Automatic detection of machine anomaly remains challenging for machine learning. We believe the capability of generative adversarial network (GAN) suits the need of machine audio anomaly detection, yet rarely has this been investigated by previous work. In this paper, we propose AEGAN-AD, a totally unsupervised approach in which the generator (also an autoencoder) is trained to reconstruct input spectrograms. It is pointed out that the denoising nature of reconstruction deprecates its capacity. Thus, the discriminator is redesigned to aid the generator during both training stage and detection stage. The performance of AEGAN-AD on the dataset of DCASE 2022 Challenge TASK 2 demonstrates the state-of-the-art result on five machine types. A novel anomaly localization method is also investigated. Source code available at: www.github.com/jianganbai/AEGAN-AD
AIJan 28, 2023
MVKT-ECG: Efficient Single-lead ECG Classification on Multi-Label Arrhythmia by Multi-View Knowledge TransferringYuzhen Qin, Li Sun, Hui Chen et al.
The widespread emergence of smart devices for ECG has sparked demand for intelligent single-lead ECG-based diagnostic systems. However, it is challenging to develop a single-lead-based ECG interpretation model for multiple diseases diagnosis due to the lack of some key disease information. In this work, we propose inter-lead Multi-View Knowledge Transferring of ECG (MVKT-ECG) to boost single-lead ECG's ability for multi-label disease diagnosis. This training strategy can transfer superior disease knowledge from multiple different views of ECG (e.g. 12-lead ECG) to single-lead-based ECG interpretation model to mine details in single-lead ECG signals that are easily overlooked by neural networks. MVKT-ECG allows this lead variety as a supervision signal within a teacher-student paradigm, where the teacher observes multi-lead ECG educates a student who observes only single-lead ECG. Since the mutual disease information between the single-lead ECG and muli-lead ECG plays a key role in knowledge transferring, we present a new disease-aware Contrastive Lead-information Transferring(CLT) to improve the mutual disease information between the single-lead ECG and muli-lead ECG. Moreover, We modify traditional Knowledge Distillation to multi-label disease Knowledge Distillation (MKD) to make it applicable for multi-label disease diagnosis. The comprehensive experiments verify that MVKT-ECG has an excellent performance in improving the diagnostic effect of single-lead ECG.
CLMar 14, 2023
Cross-lingual Alzheimer's Disease detection based on paralinguistic and pre-trained featuresXuchu Chen, Yu Pu, Jinpeng Li et al.
We present our submission to the ICASSP-SPGC-2023 ADReSS-M Challenge Task, which aims to investigate which acoustic features can be generalized and transferred across languages for Alzheimer's Disease (AD) prediction. The challenge consists of two tasks: one is to classify the speech of AD patients and healthy individuals, and the other is to infer Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score based on speech only. The difficulty is mainly embodied in the mismatch of the dataset, in which the training set is in English while the test set is in Greek. We extract paralinguistic features using openSmile toolkit and acoustic features using XLSR-53. In addition, we extract linguistic features after transcribing the speech into text. These features are used as indicators for AD detection in our method. Our method achieves an accuracy of 69.6% on the classification task and a root mean squared error (RMSE) of 4.788 on the regression task. The results show that our proposed method is expected to achieve automatic multilingual Alzheimer's Disease detection through spontaneous speech.
ASJun 2, 2023
Task-Agnostic Structured Pruning of Speech Representation ModelsHaoyu Wang, Siyuan Wang, Wei-Qiang Zhang et al.
Self-supervised pre-trained models such as Wav2vec2, Hubert, and WavLM have been shown to significantly improve many speech tasks. However, their large memory and strong computational requirements hinder their industrial applicability. Structured pruning is a hardware-friendly model compression technique but usually results in a larger loss of accuracy. In this paper, we propose a fine-grained attention head pruning method to compensate for the performance degradation. In addition, we also introduce the straight through estimator into the L0 regularization to further accelerate the pruned model. Experiments on the SUPERB benchmark show that our model can achieve comparable performance to the dense model in multiple tasks and outperforms the Wav2vec 2.0 base model on average, with 72% fewer parameters and 2 times faster inference speed.
CLApr 20, 2023
Improving Speech Translation by Cross-Modal Multi-Grained Contrastive LearningHao Zhang, Nianwen Si, Yaqi Chen et al.
The end-to-end speech translation (E2E-ST) model has gradually become a mainstream paradigm due to its low latency and less error propagation. However, it is non-trivial to train such a model well due to the task complexity and data scarcity. The speech-and-text modality differences result in the E2E-ST model performance usually inferior to the corresponding machine translation (MT) model. Based on the above observation, existing methods often use sharingmechanisms to carry out implicit knowledge transfer by imposing various constraints. However, the final model often performs worse on the MT task than the MT model trained alone, which means that the knowledge transfer ability of this method is also limited. To deal with these problems, we propose the FCCL (Fine- and Coarse- Granularity Contrastive Learning) approach for E2E-ST, which makes explicit knowledge transfer through cross-modal multi-grained contrastive learning. A key ingredient of our approach is applying contrastive learning at both sentence- and frame-level to give the comprehensive guide for extracting speech representations containing rich semantic information.In addition, we adopt a simple whitening method to alleviate the representation degeneration in the MT model, which adversely affects contrast learning. Experiments on the MuST-C benchmark show that our proposed approach significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art E2E-ST baselines on all eight language pairs. Further analysis indicates that FCCL can free up its capacity from learning grammatical structure information and force more layers to learn semantic information.
SDOct 30, 2022
Symmetric Saliency-based Adversarial Attack To Speaker IdentificationJiadi Yao, Xing Chen, Xiao-Lei Zhang et al.
Adversarial attack approaches to speaker identification either need high computational cost or are not very effective, to our knowledge. To address this issue, in this paper, we propose a novel generation-network-based approach, called symmetric saliency-based encoder-decoder (SSED), to generate adversarial voice examples to speaker identification. It contains two novel components. First, it uses a novel saliency map decoder to learn the importance of speech samples to the decision of a targeted speaker identification system, so as to make the attacker focus on generating artificial noise to the important samples. It also proposes an angular loss function to push the speaker embedding far away from the source speaker. Our experimental results demonstrate that the proposed SSED yields the state-of-the-art performance, i.e. over 97% targeted attack success rate and a signal-to-noise level of over 39 dB on both the open-set and close-set speaker identification tasks, with a low computational cost.
CVJan 5, 2023
Expressive Speech-driven Facial Animation with controllable emotionsYutong Chen, Junhong Zhao, Wei-Qiang Zhang
It is in high demand to generate facial animation with high realism, but it remains a challenging task. Existing approaches of speech-driven facial animation can produce satisfactory mouth movement and lip synchronization, but show weakness in dramatic emotional expressions and flexibility in emotion control. This paper presents a novel deep learning-based approach for expressive facial animation generation from speech that can exhibit wide-spectrum facial expressions with controllable emotion type and intensity. We propose an emotion controller module to learn the relationship between the emotion variations (e.g., types and intensity) and the corresponding facial expression parameters. It enables emotion-controllable facial animation, where the target expression can be continuously adjusted as desired. The qualitative and quantitative evaluations show that the animation generated by our method is rich in facial emotional expressiveness while retaining accurate lip movement, outperforming other state-of-the-art methods.
ASNov 2, 2022
LMD: A Learnable Mask Network to Detect Adversarial Examples for Speaker VerificationXing Chen, Jie Wang, Xiao-Lei Zhang et al.
Although the security of automatic speaker verification (ASV) is seriously threatened by recently emerged adversarial attacks, there have been some countermeasures to alleviate the threat. However, many defense approaches not only require the prior knowledge of the attackers but also possess weak interpretability. To address this issue, in this paper, we propose an attacker-independent and interpretable method, named learnable mask detector (LMD), to separate adversarial examples from the genuine ones. It utilizes score variation as an indicator to detect adversarial examples, where the score variation is the absolute discrepancy between the ASV scores of an original audio recording and its transformed audio synthesized from its masked complex spectrogram. A core component of the score variation detector is to generate the masked spectrogram by a neural network. The neural network needs only genuine examples for training, which makes it an attacker-independent approach. Its interpretability lies that the neural network is trained to minimize the score variation of the targeted ASV, and maximize the number of the masked spectrogram bins of the genuine training examples. Its foundation is based on the observation that, masking out the vast majority of the spectrogram bins with little speaker information will inevitably introduce a large score variation to the adversarial example, and a small score variation to the genuine example. Experimental results with 12 attackers and two representative ASV systems show that our proposed method outperforms five state-of-the-art baselines. The extensive experimental results can also be a benchmark for the detection-based ASV defenses.
ASOct 27, 2022
Exploring Effective Distillation of Self-Supervised Speech Models for Automatic Speech RecognitionYujin Wang, Changli Tang, Ziyang Ma et al.
Recent years have witnessed great strides in self-supervised learning (SSL) on the speech processing. The SSL model is normally pre-trained on a great variety of unlabelled data and a large model size is preferred to increase the modeling capacity. However, this might limit its potential applications due to the expensive computation and memory costs introduced by the oversize model. Miniaturization for SSL models has become an important research direction of practical value. To this end, we explore the effective distillation of HuBERT-based SSL models for automatic speech recognition (ASR). First, in order to establish a strong baseline, a comprehensive study on different student model structures is conducted. On top of this, as a supplement to the regression loss widely adopted in previous works, a discriminative loss is introduced for HuBERT to enhance the distillation performance, especially in low-resource scenarios. In addition, we design a simple and effective algorithm to distill the front-end input from waveform to Fbank feature, resulting in 17% parameter reduction and doubling inference speed, at marginal performance degradation.
CLMar 1, 2022
BERT-LID: Leveraging BERT to Improve Spoken Language IdentificationYuting Nie, Junhong Zhao, Wei-Qiang Zhang et al.
Language identification is the task of automatically determining the identity of a language conveyed by a spoken segment. It has a profound impact on the multilingual interoperability of an intelligent speech system. Despite language identification attaining high accuracy on medium or long utterances(>3s), the performance on short utterances (<=1s) is still far from satisfactory. We propose a BERT-based language identification system (BERT-LID) to improve language identification performance, especially on short-duration speech segments. We extend the original BERT model by taking the phonetic posteriorgrams (PPG) derived from the front-end phone recognizer as input. Then we deployed the optimal deep classifier followed by it for language identification. Our BERT-LID model can improve the baseline accuracy by about 6.5% on long-segment identification and 19.9% on short-segment identification, demonstrating our BERT-LID's effectiveness to language identification.
CLMay 9Code
Dolphin-CN-Dialect: Where Chinese Dialects MatterYangyang Meng, Huihang Zhong, Guodong Lin et al.
We present Dolphin-CN-Dialect, a streaming-capable ASR model with a focus on Chinese and dialect-rich scenarios. Compared to the previous version, Dolphin-CN-Dialect introduces substantial improvements in data processing, tokenization, training stability, and data sampling strategies. To address the challenges of highly imbalanced dialect data, we propose a temperature-based sampling strategy that effectively balances standard Mandarin and low-resource dialects, leading to significant gains in dialect recognition performance. In addition, we redesign the tokenizer to better align with linguistic characteristics, adopting character-level modeling for Chinese and subword modeling for English, while introducing extensible dialect tokens. Experimental results show that Dolphin-CN-Dialect achieves improvement in dialect recognition accuracy and CER reduction compared to Dolphin. Furthermore, Dolphin-CN-Dialect reaches competitive performance with recent SOTA open-source ASR models, while maintaining a significantly smaller model size. Dolphin-CN-Dialect supports both streaming and non-streaming inference, enabling a practical balance between latency and accuracy. It also provides flexible customization through hotword support and efficient deployment optimized for specialized hardware. These improvements make Dolphin-CN-Dialect a strong and practical solution for real-world multi-dialect ASR applications.
CLOct 12, 2022
Summary on the ISCSLP 2022 Chinese-English Code-Switching ASR ChallengeShuhao Deng, Chengfei Li, Jinfeng Bai et al.
Code-switching automatic speech recognition becomes one of the most challenging and the most valuable scenarios of automatic speech recognition, due to the code-switching phenomenon between multilingual language and the frequent occurrence of code-switching phenomenon in daily life. The ISCSLP 2022 Chinese-English Code-Switching Automatic Speech Recognition (CSASR) Challenge aims to promote the development of code-switching automatic speech recognition. The ISCSLP 2022 CSASR challenge provided two training sets, TAL_CSASR corpus and MagicData-RAMC corpus, a development and a test set for participants, which are used for CSASR model training and evaluation. Along with the challenge, we also provide the baseline system performance for reference. As a result, more than 40 teams participated in this challenge, and the winner team achieved 16.70% Mixture Error Rate (MER) performance on the test set and has achieved 9.8% MER absolute improvement compared with the baseline system. In this paper, we will describe the datasets, the associated baselines system and the requirements, and summarize the CSASR challenge results and major techniques and tricks used in the submitted systems.
SDDec 4, 2025Code
YingMusic-SVC: Real-World Robust Zero-Shot Singing Voice Conversion with Flow-GRPO and Singing-Specific Inductive BiasesGongyu Chen, Xiaoyu Zhang, Zhenqiang Weng et al.
Singing voice conversion (SVC) aims to render the target singer's timbre while preserving melody and lyrics. However, existing zero-shot SVC systems remain fragile in real songs due to harmony interference, F0 errors, and the lack of inductive biases for singing. We propose YingMusic-SVC, a robust zero-shot framework that unifies continuous pre-training, robust supervised fine-tuning, and Flow-GRPO reinforcement learning. Our model introduces a singing-trained RVC timbre shifter for timbre-content disentanglement, an F0-aware timbre adaptor for dynamic vocal expression, and an energy-balanced rectified flow matching loss to enhance high-frequency fidelity. Experiments on a graded multi-track benchmark show that YingMusic-SVC achieves consistent improvements over strong open-source baselines in timbre similarity, intelligibility, and perceptual naturalness, especially under accompanied and harmony-contaminated conditions, demonstrating its effectiveness for real-world SVC deployment.
CLJun 2, 2023
DistilXLSR: A Light Weight Cross-Lingual Speech Representation ModelHaoyu Wang, Siyuan Wang, Wei-Qiang Zhang et al.
Multilingual self-supervised speech representation models have greatly enhanced the speech recognition performance for low-resource languages, and the compression of these huge models has also become a crucial prerequisite for their industrial application. In this paper, we propose DistilXLSR, a distilled cross-lingual speech representation model. By randomly shuffling the phonemes of existing speech, we reduce the linguistic information and distill cross-lingual models using only English data. We also design a layer-jumping initialization method to fully leverage the teacher's pre-trained weights. Experiments on 2 kinds of teacher models and 15 low-resource languages show that our method can reduce the parameters by 50% while maintaining cross-lingual representation ability. Our method is proven to be generalizable to various languages/teacher models and has the potential to improve the cross-lingual performance of the English pre-trained models.
CLOct 13, 2022
Multilingual Zero Resource Speech Recognition Base on Self-Supervise Pre-Trained Acoustic ModelsHaoyu Wang, Wei-Qiang Zhang, Hongbin Suo et al.
Labeled audio data is insufficient to build satisfying speech recognition systems for most of the languages in the world. There have been some zero-resource methods trying to perform phoneme or word-level speech recognition without labeled audio data of the target language, but the error rate of these methods is usually too high to be applied in real-world scenarios. Recently, the representation ability of self-supervise pre-trained models has been found to be extremely beneficial in zero-resource phoneme recognition. As far as we are concerned, this paper is the first attempt to extend the use of pre-trained models into word-level zero-resource speech recognition. This is done by fine-tuning the pre-trained models on IPA phoneme transcriptions and decoding with a language model trained on extra texts. Experiments on Wav2vec 2.0 and HuBERT models show that this method can achieve less than 20% word error rate on some languages, and the average error rate on 8 languages is 33.77%.
CLJun 29, 2022
The THUEE System Description for the IARPA OpenASR21 ChallengeJing Zhao, Haoyu Wang, Jinpeng Li et al.
This paper describes the THUEE team's speech recognition system for the IARPA Open Automatic Speech Recognition Challenge (OpenASR21), with further experiment explorations. We achieve outstanding results under both the Constrained and Constrained-plus training conditions. For the Constrained training condition, we construct our basic ASR system based on the standard hybrid architecture. To alleviate the Out-Of-Vocabulary (OOV) problem, we extend the pronunciation lexicon using Grapheme-to-Phoneme (G2P) techniques for both OOV and potential new words. Standard acoustic model structures such as CNN-TDNN-F and CNN-TDNN-F-A are adopted. In addition, multiple data augmentation techniques are applied. For the Constrained-plus training condition, we use the self-supervised learning framework wav2vec2.0. We experiment with various fine-tuning techniques with the Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) criterion on top of the publicly available pre-trained model XLSR-53. We find that the frontend feature extractor plays an important role when applying the wav2vec2.0 pre-trained model to the encoder-decoder based CTC/Attention ASR architecture. Extra improvements can be achieved by using the CTC model finetuned in the target language as the frontend feature extractor.
CLOct 6, 2023
Transferring speech-generic and depression-specific knowledge for Alzheimer's disease detectionZiyun Cui, Wen Wu, Wei-Qiang Zhang et al.
The detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) from spontaneous speech has attracted increasing attention while the sparsity of training data remains an important issue. This paper handles the issue by knowledge transfer, specifically from both speech-generic and depression-specific knowledge. The paper first studies sequential knowledge transfer from generic foundation models pretrained on large amounts of speech and text data. A block-wise analysis is performed for AD diagnosis based on the representations extracted from different intermediate blocks of different foundation models. Apart from the knowledge from speech-generic representations, this paper also proposes to simultaneously transfer the knowledge from a speech depression detection task based on the high comorbidity rates of depression and AD. A parallel knowledge transfer framework is studied that jointly learns the information shared between these two tasks. Experimental results show that the proposed method improves AD and depression detection, and produces a state-of-the-art F1 score of 0.928 for AD diagnosis on the commonly used ADReSSo dataset.
SDSep 11, 2024
Improving Anomalous Sound Detection via Low-Rank Adaptation Fine-Tuning of Pre-Trained Audio ModelsXinhu Zheng, Anbai Jiang, Bing Han et al.
Anomalous Sound Detection (ASD) has gained significant interest through the application of various Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies in industrial settings. Though possessing great potential, ASD systems can hardly be readily deployed in real production sites due to the generalization problem, which is primarily caused by the difficulty of data collection and the complexity of environmental factors. This paper introduces a robust ASD model that leverages audio pre-trained models. Specifically, we fine-tune these models using machine operation data, employing SpecAug as a data augmentation strategy. Additionally, we investigate the impact of utilizing Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) tuning instead of full fine-tuning to address the problem of limited data for fine-tuning. Our experiments on the DCASE2023 Task 2 dataset establish a new benchmark of 77.75% on the evaluation set, with a significant improvement of 6.48% compared with previous state-of-the-art (SOTA) models, including top-tier traditional convolutional networks and speech pre-trained models, which demonstrates the effectiveness of audio pre-trained models with LoRA tuning. Ablation studies are also conducted to showcase the efficacy of the proposed scheme.
CLMar 26, 2025Code
Dolphin: A Large-Scale Automatic Speech Recognition Model for Eastern LanguagesYangyang Meng, Jinpeng Li, Guodong Lin et al.
This report introduces Dolphin, a large-scale multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) model that extends the Whisper architecture to support a wider range of languages. Our approach integrates in-house proprietary and open-source datasets to refine and optimize Dolphin's performance. The model is specifically designed to achieve notable recognition accuracy for 40 Eastern languages across East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East, while also supporting 22 Chinese dialects. Experimental evaluations show that Dolphin significantly outperforms current state-of-the-art open-source models across various languages. To promote reproducibility and community-driven innovation, we are making our trained models and inference source code publicly available.
ASAug 10, 2024
Improving Whisper's Recognition Performance for Under-Represented Language Kazakh Leveraging Unpaired Speech and TextJinpeng Li, Yu Pu, Qi Sun et al.
Whisper and other large-scale automatic speech recognition models have made significant progress in performance. However, their performance on many low-resource languages, such as Kazakh, is not satisfactory. It is worth researching how to utilize low-cost data to improve the performance of Whisper on under-represented languages. In this study, we utilized easily accessible unpaired speech and text data and combined the language model GPT with Whisper on Kazakh. We implemented end of transcript (EOT) judgment modification and hallucination penalty to improve the performance of speech recognition. Further, we employed the decoding average token log probability as a criterion to select samples from unlabeled speech data and used pseudo-labeled data to fine-tune the model to further improve its performance. Ultimately, we achieved more than 10\% absolute WER reduction in multiple experiments, and the whole process has the potential to be generalized to other under-represented languages.
CLMar 13, 2024Code
SpeechColab Leaderboard: An Open-Source Platform for Automatic Speech Recognition EvaluationJiayu Du, Jinpeng Li, Guoguo Chen et al.
In the wake of the surging tide of deep learning over the past decade, Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) has garnered substantial attention, leading to the emergence of numerous publicly accessible ASR systems that are actively being integrated into our daily lives. Nonetheless, the impartial and replicable evaluation of these ASR systems encounters challenges due to various crucial subtleties. In this paper we introduce the SpeechColab Leaderboard, a general-purpose, open-source platform designed for ASR evaluation. With this platform: (i) We report a comprehensive benchmark, unveiling the current state-of-the-art panorama for ASR systems, covering both open-source models and industrial commercial services. (ii) We quantize how distinct nuances in the scoring pipeline influence the final benchmark outcomes. These include nuances related to capitalization, punctuation, interjection, contraction, synonym usage, compound words, etc. These issues have gained prominence in the context of the transition towards an End-to-End future. (iii) We propose a practical modification to the conventional Token-Error-Rate (TER) evaluation metric, with inspirations from Kolmogorov complexity and Normalized Information Distance (NID). This adaptation, called modified-TER (mTER), achieves proper normalization and symmetrical treatment of reference and hypothesis. By leveraging this platform as a large-scale testing ground, this study demonstrates the robustness and backward compatibility of mTER when compared to TER. The SpeechColab Leaderboard is accessible at https://github.com/SpeechColab/Leaderboard
SDAug 27, 2024
CoopASD: Cooperative Machine Anomalous Sound Detection with Privacy ConcernsAnbai Jiang, Yuchen Shi, Pingyi Fan et al.
Machine anomalous sound detection (ASD) has emerged as one of the most promising applications in the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) due to its unprecedented efficacy in mitigating risks of malfunctions and promoting production efficiency. Previous works mainly investigated the machine ASD task under centralized settings. However, developing the ASD system under decentralized settings is crucial in practice, since the machine data are dispersed in various factories and the data should not be explicitly shared due to privacy concerns. To enable these factories to cooperatively develop a scalable ASD model while preserving their privacy, we propose a novel framework named CoopASD, where each factory trains an ASD model on its local dataset, and a central server aggregates these local models periodically. We employ a pre-trained model as the backbone of the ASD model to improve its robustness and develop specialized techniques to stabilize the model under a completely non-iid and domain shift setting. Compared with previous state-of-the-art (SOTA) models trained in centralized settings, CoopASD showcases competitive results with negligible degradation of 0.08%. We also conduct extensive ablation studies to demonstrate the effectiveness of CoopASD.
LGJul 22, 2025Code
FISHER: A Foundation Model for Multi-Modal Industrial Signal Comprehensive RepresentationPingyi Fan, Anbai Jiang, Shuwei Zhang et al.
With the rapid deployment of SCADA systems, how to effectively analyze industrial signals and detect abnormal states is an urgent need for the industry. Due to the significant heterogeneity of these signals, which we summarize as the M5 problem, previous works only focus on small sub-problems and employ specialized models, failing to utilize the synergies between modalities and the powerful scaling law. However, we argue that the M5 signals can be modeled in a unified manner due to the intrinsic similarity. As a result, we propose FISHER, a Foundation model for multi-modal Industrial Signal compreHEnsive Representation. To support arbitrary sampling rates, FISHER considers the increment of sampling rate as the concatenation of sub-band information. Specifically, FISHER takes the STFT sub-band as the modeling unit and adopts a teacher student SSL framework for pre-training. We also develop the RMIS benchmark, which evaluates the representations of M5 industrial signals on multiple health management tasks. Compared with top SSL models, FISHER showcases versatile and outstanding capabilities with a general performance gain up to 5.03%, along with much more efficient scaling curves. We also investigate the scaling law on downstream tasks and derive potential avenues for future works. FISHER is now open-sourced on https://github.com/jianganbai/FISHER
LGOct 27, 2025
SARNet: A Spike-Aware consecutive validation Framework for Accurate Remaining Useful Life PredictionJunhao Fan, Wenrui Liang, Wei-Qiang Zhang
Accurate prediction of remaining useful life (RUL) is essential to enhance system reliability and reduce maintenance risk. Yet many strong contemporary models are fragile around fault onset and opaque to engineers: short, high-energy spikes are smoothed away or misread, fixed thresholds blunt sensitivity, and physics-based explanations are scarce. To remedy this, we introduce SARNet (Spike-Aware Consecutive Validation Framework), which builds on a Modern Temporal Convolutional Network (ModernTCN) and adds spike-aware detection to provide physics-informed interpretability. ModernTCN forecasts degradation-sensitive indicators; an adaptive consecutive threshold validates true spikes while suppressing noise. Failure-prone segments then receive targeted feature engineering (spectral slopes, statistical derivatives, energy ratios), and the final RUL is produced by a stacked RF--LGBM regressor. Across benchmark-ported datasets under an event-triggered protocol, SARNet consistently lowers error compared to recent baselines (RMSE 0.0365, MAE 0.0204) while remaining lightweight, robust, and easy to deploy.
SDSep 25, 2025
DiaMoE-TTS: A Unified IPA-Based Dialect TTS Framework with Mixture-of-Experts and Parameter-Efficient Zero-Shot AdaptationZiqi Chen, Gongyu Chen, Yihua Wang et al.
Dialect speech embodies rich cultural and linguistic diversity, yet building text-to-speech (TTS) systems for dialects remains challenging due to scarce data, inconsistent orthographies, and complex phonetic variation. To address these issues, we present DiaMoE-TTS, a unified IPA-based framework that standardizes phonetic representations and resolves grapheme-to-phoneme ambiguities. Built upon the F5-TTS architecture, the system introduces a dialect-aware Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) to model phonological differences and employs parameter-efficient adaptation with Low-Rank Adaptors (LoRA) and Conditioning Adapters for rapid transfer to new dialects. Unlike approaches dependent on large-scale or proprietary resources, DiaMoE-TTS enables scalable, open-data-driven synthesis. Experiments demonstrate natural and expressive speech generation, achieving zero-shot performance on unseen dialects and specialized domains such as Peking Opera with only a few hours of data.
ASJun 17, 2024
GigaSpeech 2: An Evolving, Large-Scale and Multi-domain ASR Corpus for Low-Resource Languages with Automated Crawling, Transcription and RefinementYifan Yang, Zheshu Song, Jianheng Zhuo et al.
The evolution of speech technology has been spurred by the rapid increase in dataset sizes. Traditional speech models generally depend on a large amount of labeled training data, which is scarce for low-resource languages. This paper presents GigaSpeech 2, a large-scale, multi-domain, multilingual speech recognition corpus. It is designed for low-resource languages and does not rely on paired speech and text data. GigaSpeech 2 comprises about 30,000 hours of automatically transcribed speech, including Thai, Indonesian, and Vietnamese, gathered from unlabeled YouTube videos. We also introduce an automated pipeline for data crawling, transcription, and label refinement. Specifically, this pipeline involves Whisper for initial transcription, MMS for forced alignment, and multi-dimensional filtering for data quality assurance. A modified Noisy Student Training is developed to further refine flawed pseudo labels iteratively, thereby enhancing model performance. Experimental results on our manually transcribed evaluation set and two public test sets from Common Voice and FLEURS confirm our corpus's high quality and broad applicability. Notably, ASR models trained on GigaSpeech 2 can reduce the word error rate for Thai, Indonesian, and Vietnamese on our challenging and realistic YouTube test set by 25% to 40% compared to Whisper large-v3, with merely 10% model parameters. Furthermore, our ASR models trained on GigaSpeech 2 yield superior performance compared to commercial services. We hope that our newly introduced corpus and pipeline will open a new avenue for low-resource speech recognition and significantly facilitate research in this area.
SDJun 14, 2024
Simul-Whisper: Attention-Guided Streaming Whisper with Truncation DetectionHaoyu Wang, Guoqiang Hu, Guodong Lin et al.
As a robust and large-scale multilingual speech recognition model, Whisper has demonstrated impressive results in many low-resource and out-of-distribution scenarios. However, its encoder-decoder structure hinders its application to streaming speech recognition. In this paper, we introduce Simul-Whisper, which uses the time alignment embedded in Whisper's cross-attention to guide auto-regressive decoding and achieve chunk-based streaming ASR without any fine-tuning of the pre-trained model. Furthermore, we observe the negative effect of the truncated words at the chunk boundaries on the decoding results and propose an integrate-and-fire-based truncation detection model to address this issue. Experiments on multiple languages and Whisper architectures show that Simul-Whisper achieves an average absolute word error rate degradation of only 1.46% at a chunk size of 1 second, which significantly outperforms the current state-of-the-art baseline.
SDAug 27, 2021
Full Attention Bidirectional Deep Learning Structure for Single Channel Speech EnhancementYuzi Yan, Wei-Qiang Zhang, Michael T. Johnson
As the cornerstone of other important technologies, such as speech recognition and speech synthesis, speech enhancement is a critical area in audio signal processing. In this paper, a new deep learning structure for speech enhancement is demonstrated. The model introduces a "full" attention mechanism to a bidirectional sequence-to-sequence method to make use of latent information after each focal frame. This is an extension of the previous attention-based RNN method. The proposed bidirectional attention-based architecture achieves better performance in terms of speech quality (PESQ), compared with OM-LSA, CNN-LSTM, T-GSA and the unidirectional attention-based LSTM baseline.
SDJul 6, 2021
AdaSpeech 3: Adaptive Text to Speech for Spontaneous StyleYuzi Yan, Xu Tan, Bohan Li et al.
While recent text to speech (TTS) models perform very well in synthesizing reading-style (e.g., audiobook) speech, it is still challenging to synthesize spontaneous-style speech (e.g., podcast or conversation), mainly because of two reasons: 1) the lack of training data for spontaneous speech; 2) the difficulty in modeling the filled pauses (um and uh) and diverse rhythms in spontaneous speech. In this paper, we develop AdaSpeech 3, an adaptive TTS system that fine-tunes a well-trained reading-style TTS model for spontaneous-style speech. Specifically, 1) to insert filled pauses (FP) in the text sequence appropriately, we introduce an FP predictor to the TTS model; 2) to model the varying rhythms, we introduce a duration predictor based on mixture of experts (MoE), which contains three experts responsible for the generation of fast, medium and slow speech respectively, and fine-tune it as well as the pitch predictor for rhythm adaptation; 3) to adapt to other speaker timbre, we fine-tune some parameters in the decoder with few speech data. To address the challenge of lack of training data, we mine a spontaneous speech dataset to support our research this work and facilitate future research on spontaneous TTS. Experiments show that AdaSpeech 3 synthesizes speech with natural FP and rhythms in spontaneous styles, and achieves much better MOS and SMOS scores than previous adaptive TTS systems.
SDJul 5, 2021
DeepRapper: Neural Rap Generation with Rhyme and Rhythm ModelingLanqing Xue, Kaitao Song, Duocai Wu et al.
Rap generation, which aims to produce lyrics and corresponding singing beats, needs to model both rhymes and rhythms. Previous works for rap generation focused on rhyming lyrics but ignored rhythmic beats, which are important for rap performance. In this paper, we develop DeepRapper, a Transformer-based rap generation system that can model both rhymes and rhythms. Since there is no available rap dataset with rhythmic beats, we develop a data mining pipeline to collect a large-scale rap dataset, which includes a large number of rap songs with aligned lyrics and rhythmic beats. Second, we design a Transformer-based autoregressive language model which carefully models rhymes and rhythms. Specifically, we generate lyrics in the reverse order with rhyme representation and constraint for rhyme enhancement and insert a beat symbol into lyrics for rhythm/beat modeling. To our knowledge, DeepRapper is the first system to generate rap with both rhymes and rhythms. Both objective and subjective evaluations demonstrate that DeepRapper generates creative and high-quality raps with rhymes and rhythms. Code will be released on GitHub.
SDJun 13, 2021
GigaSpeech: An Evolving, Multi-domain ASR Corpus with 10,000 Hours of Transcribed AudioGuoguo Chen, Shuzhou Chai, Guanbo Wang et al.
This paper introduces GigaSpeech, an evolving, multi-domain English speech recognition corpus with 10,000 hours of high quality labeled audio suitable for supervised training, and 40,000 hours of total audio suitable for semi-supervised and unsupervised training. Around 40,000 hours of transcribed audio is first collected from audiobooks, podcasts and YouTube, covering both read and spontaneous speaking styles, and a variety of topics, such as arts, science, sports, etc. A new forced alignment and segmentation pipeline is proposed to create sentence segments suitable for speech recognition training, and to filter out segments with low-quality transcription. For system training, GigaSpeech provides five subsets of different sizes, 10h, 250h, 1000h, 2500h, and 10000h. For our 10,000-hour XL training subset, we cap the word error rate at 4% during the filtering/validation stage, and for all our other smaller training subsets, we cap it at 0%. The DEV and TEST evaluation sets, on the other hand, are re-processed by professional human transcribers to ensure high transcription quality. Baseline systems are provided for popular speech recognition toolkits, namely Athena, ESPnet, Kaldi and Pika.
SDDec 25, 2019
THUEE system description for NIST 2019 SRE CTS ChallengeYi Liu, Tianyu Liang, Can Xu et al.
This paper describes the systems submitted by the department of electronic engineering, institute of microelectronics of Tsinghua university and TsingMicro Co. Ltd. (THUEE) to the NIST 2019 speaker recognition evaluation CTS challenge. Six subsystems, including etdnn/ams, ftdnn/as, eftdnn/ams, resnet, multitask and c-vector are developed in this evaluation.
SDMar 28, 2019
Hierarchical Pooling Structure for Weakly Labeled Sound Event DetectionKe-Xin He, Yu-Han Shen, Wei-Qiang Zhang
Sound event detection with weakly labeled data is considered as a problem of multi-instance learning. And the choice of pooling function is the key to solving this problem. In this paper, we proposed a hierarchical pooling structure to improve the performance of weakly labeled sound event detection system. Proposed pooling structure has made remarkable improvements on three types of pooling function without adding any parameters. Moreover, our system has achieved competitive performance on Task 4 of Detection and Classification of Acoustic Scenes and Events (DCASE) 2017 Challenge using hierarchical pooling structure.
SDOct 29, 2018
Learning How to Listen: A Temporal-Frequential Attention Model for Sound Event DetectionYu-Han Shen, Ke-Xin He, Wei-Qiang Zhang
In this paper, we propose a temporal-frequential attention model for sound event detection (SED). Our network learns how to listen with two attention models: a temporal attention model and a frequential attention model. Proposed system learns when to listen using the temporal attention model while it learns where to listen on the frequency axis using the frequential attention model. With these two models, we attempt to make our system pay more attention to important frames or segments and important frequency components for sound event detection. Our proposed method is demonstrated on the task 2 of Detection and Classification of Acoustic Scenes and Events (DCASE) 2017 Challenge and achieves competitive performance.
SDOct 3, 2018
SAM-GCNN: A Gated Convolutional Neural Network with Segment-Level Attention Mechanism for Home Activity MonitoringYu-Han Shen, Ke-Xin He, Wei-Qiang Zhang
In this paper, we propose a method for home activity monitoring. We demonstrate our model on dataset of Detection and Classification of Acoustic Scenes and Events (DCASE) 2018 Challenge Task 5. This task aims to classify multi-channel audios into one of the provided pre-defined classes. All of these classes are daily activities performed in a home environment. To tackle this task, we propose a gated convolutional neural network with segment-level attention mechanism (SAM-GCNN). The proposed framework is a convolutional model with two auxiliary modules: a gated convolutional neural network and a segment-level attention mechanism. Furthermore, we adopted model ensemble to enhance the capability of generalization of our model. We evaluated our work on the development dataset of DCASE 2018 Task 5 and achieved competitive performance, with a macro-averaged F-1 score increasing from 83.76% to 89.33%, compared with the convolutional baseline system.